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  1. Dictionary
    Flat
    /flat/

    adjective

    adverb

    noun

    • 1. the flat part of something: "she placed the flat of her hand over her glass"
    • 2. an upright section of painted stage scenery mounted on a frame.

    verb

    • 1. lower (a note) by a semitone: North American "when a person has a poor ear for music, he will flat and sharp right along without knowing it"
    • 2. make flat; flatten: archaic "flat the loaves down"
  2. 4 days ago · 1. countable noun. A flat is a set of rooms for living in, usually on one floor and part of a larger building. A flat usually includes a kitchen and bathroom . [mainly British] Sara lives with her partner and children in a flat in central London. …a block of flats. Later on, Victor from flat 10 called.

  3. A flat is an apartment. It's called a flat because all the rooms in it are usually on the same floor. The word flat is much more common in British than American English. Geometrically, something flat is an even, level plane, like Kansas relative to the Rocky Mountains, or the cargo area of a flatbed truck. As an adjective, flat means "less than ...

  4. A1. a set of rooms to live in, with all the rooms on one level of a building: a large block of flats. Fewer examples. I live by myself in a small flat. He showed me round the flat. He lives in a block of flats. They live in a two-bedroom flat. I'll have the flat all to myself this weekend. flat. adjective. uk / flæt / us flatter | flattest.

  5. (also apartment especially in North American English) a set of rooms for living in, usually on one floor of a building. They're renting a furnished flat on the third floor. to buy/sell a flat. in a flat Do you live in a flat or a house? a basement/ground-floor/top-floor flat. a two-bedroom flat.

  6. 1. a. Having a smooth, even surface: a flat field. See Synonyms at level. b. Having a relatively broad level surface in relation to thickness or depth: a flat box. 2. a. Being in horizontal position; lying down: flat on his back. b. Being without slope or curvature: a flat line on a chart. c. Having a low heel or no heel: flat shoes. 3.

  7. Definition of flat adjective from the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary. flat. adjective. /flæt/ (flatter, flattest) level. having a level surface, not curved or sloping low buildings with flat roofs People used to think the earth was flat. Exercise is the only way to get a flat stomach after having a baby.

  8. level, even, or smooth in surface, such as land or tabletops: the flat prairie. lying horizontally and at full length: flat on the floor. not deep, high, or thick: stacks of flat boxes at the pizzeria. spread out, as an unrolled map or the open hand: The map was flat on the table. with the air out; deflated;

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